Are you some sort of simpleton? Read that Twit feed. It is nonstop slamming of Stupid Bobby and defending Trump. The Twit with the hyperlink in it is defending Trump. Trump and Rudy have been buds for decades. What you are selling doesn't add up because it is fabricated bullshit for the feeble minded.
Right Frank I saw an opportunity and I took it on. Because its a good opportunity to point out what Trumps buds believe. I am playing hardball. I am holding Trumps feet to the fire on the eve of a new government funding. I want to know how his good bud lawyer friends fit into the picture?
Trump was elected for his rhetoric to stop illegal immigration. Trump is going to stop sanctuary cities? Well when those Circuit judges make rulings against his positions what does Rudy stand for?
Immigration[edit]
As prosecutor under the Reagan administration in the 1980s, Giuliani defended the administration's position to keep thousands of Haitian refugees in detention centers rather than granting them asylum after they fled the regime of Jean-Claude Duvalier.[92]
Giuliani was a strong defender of illegal immigrants' rights as mayor, fighting for them to be allowed to use public services and attend public schools. But he has changed some of his position on the 2007 campaign trail.[92]
As Mayor of New York City, Giuliani encouraged hardworking illegal immigrants to move to New York City.[93] He said:
Some of the hardest-working and most productive people in this city are undocumented aliens. If you come here and you work hard and you happen to be in an undocumented status, you're one of the people who we want in this city. You're somebody that we want to protect, and we want you to get out from under what is often a life of being like a fugitive, which is really unfair.[93]
He pressed for $12 million to start a city agency which would help immigrants gain citizenship. He defended the city's policy of not allowing police and hospital workers to ask about citizenship status.[94]
In 1996, Giuliani said, "Indeed, the whole process of immigration is something the Republican Party should embrace."[95] In the same year, at a public talk at the John F. Kennedy School of Government he said, "We're never, ever going to be able to totally control immigration in a country that is as large as ours." He went on to say, "If you were to totally control immigration into the United States, you might very well destroy the economy of the United States, because you'd have to inspect everything and everyone in every way possible."[96]
Giuliani sued the federal government on October 11, 1996 for what he called unconstitutional provisions against immigrants.[97][98] In announcing his lawsuit he said,
"I believe the anti-immigration movement in America is one of our most serious public problems." He added: "I am speaking out and filing this action because I believe that a threat to immigration can be a threat to the future of our country."[99][100]
Giuliani said that the Immigration and Naturalization Service "do nothing with those names but terrorize people." His lawsuit against the new immigration law claimed that the new federal requirement to report illegal immigrants violated the Tenth Amendment. He said that the law, as well as the Welfare Reform Act, were "inherently unfair."[101] He pursued this lawsuit to the U.S. Supreme Court, but he lost the case.[102] [103]
In 1996 Giuliani voiced his support for New York City's sanctuary city policy saying:
[it] protects undocumented immigrants in New York City from being reported to the INS while they are using city services that are critical for their health and safety, and for the health and safety of the entire city...There are times when undocumented immigrants must have a substantial degree of protection.[104]
In 1997, Giuliani signed a statement of principles which read, "The new laws recently passed by Congress and signed into law by the President unfairly target immigrants in the United States by severely limiting their access to many federal benefits which citizens are entitled to receive." and "Since legal immigrants work and pay taxes like American citizens, they should be entitled to temporary assistance when they fall into personal difficulty. Furthermore, the denial of federal assistance to legal immigrants in need is patently unfair and arguably unconstitutional and inhumane."[105] In 1998, Giuliani argued for expanding Medicare, SSI and foodstamp benefits to legal immigrants and also, "Providing full Medicaid coverage to Prucol aliens with HIV/AIDS and other chronic illnesses"[106]
In April 2006, Giuliani went on the record as favoring the US Senate's comprehensive immigration plan which includes a path to citizenship and a guest worker plan. He rejected the US House approach because he does not think House Resolution 4437 could be enforced. [107][108][109]
In February 2007, in a meeting with California Republicans, Giuliani was quoted as saying "We need a [border] fence, and a highly technological one."[110] Giuliani also reiterated his support for some sort of path to citizenship for certain illegal immigrants after a process to be determined, but added that at the end of the process the immigrants should "display the ability to read and write English" and must assimilate into American society. In 2000, Giuliani said, "I wish that we would actually make America more open to immigrants."[111] He does not believe in deportation of illegal immigrants and advocates a "tamper-proof" national ID card and database for illegal immigrants.[92]
On September 7, 2007, during a CNN interview, he said that illegal immigrants are not criminals.[112]
On the topic of legal immigration, in June 2007 Giuliani rejected Tom Tancredo's calls for a temporary stop of legal immigration. Giuliani stated: "We should always be open to legal immigration."[113] In September 2007, Giuliani affirmed that legal immigration should be increased.[114]
In 2018, working as President Donald Trump's personal lawyer, Giuliani disagreed with the Trump administration's separation of children from their parents, and he publicly supported "a pathway to citizenship for most of the millions of undocumented immigrants already living in the United States."[115] Giuliani said that a comprehensive immigration bill would solve the border crises, and noted his record of supporting a pathway to citizenship in the past.[116]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Political_positions_of_Rudy_Giuliani#Immigration